Abstract
A technique has been developed which facilitates the preparation of electro-polished micro-foil transmission electron microscopy (TEM) specimens, which have previously been machined out of ≈100μm diameter metallic powder particles using a Focussed Ion Beam (FIB) instrument. The technique can be used to create small volume TEM specimens from most metallic powder particles and bulk metal samples. This is especially useful when the matrices are ferritic steels, which are often difficult to image in the electron microscope, since the necessary aberration corrections change as the sample is tilted in the magnetic field of the objective lens.Small samples, such as powder particles, were attached to gold support grids using deposited platinum and were then ion milled to approximately 2μm thickness in a focussed ion beam (FIB) instrument. Subsequently, the specimen assemblies were electropolished for short durations under standard conditions, to produce large (5μm×5μm) electron transparent regions of material. The specimens produced by this technique were free from FIB related artefacts and facilitated atomic resolution scanning-TEM (STEM) imaging of ferritic and nickel matrices containing, for example, yttrium rich oxide nano-dispersoids.
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